The world’s leaders will be meeting June 4-6, 2012 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil for the Rio+20 Earth Summit. This Summit is an important opportunity to advance concrete action on global warming. Countries, companies, state and local governments, and civil society groups should be expected to come to Rio prepared to strengthen the implementation of their existing commitments and undertake new actions to reduce emissions. One of roads to Rio should lead through clean energy and deforestation actions that help to address global warming pollution.

What concrete new actions are you committing to take in Rio towards your commitment?

How are you strengthening your commitment?

So what tangible outcomes from Rio+20 could help in global efforts to reduce carbon pollution? We should expect that before and during Rio “coalitions of the willing” (key countries, companies, etc) commit to implement new actions on important energy/climate opportunities. Some initial thoughts are that this coalition should commit to action on:

Increase energy efficiency, such as by phasing out inefficient light bulbs, adopting and implementing building codes and standards, or implementing appliance efficiency standards;

Reduce deforestation emissions such as commitments by key companies to avoid purchasing products that are causing deforestation (e.g., soy or cattle from the deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon, palm oil from deforestation in Indonesia, or illegal wood and wood products throughout the world).

Each of these actions should contain three key elements:

Specific commitments by key countries, communities, companies, etc.;

Commitments to jointly work together, including technical assistance and coordinated actions where appropriate;

Provisions for tracking and accountability so that there is a follow-up system to ensure that the commitments are delivered on the ground.

Roads to Rio – the climate and energy path. The roads to Rio can help make important progress on efforts to address carbon pollution in key countries around the world. We need to wait until after the climate negotiations in Durban, South Africa to see if there are new agreements or issues which should be brought to the Rio 2012 Summit. So there may be additional follow through from Durban which will require world leaders to carry forward.